- nereyeAlso, in some countries (e.g. Germany) applications explicitly do not track that information (such as how long a documented was edited) for legal reasons related to privacy laws.
- [1] “ The Glazer family’s acquisition of Manchester United remains controversial to this day.
Their £790m takeover in the summer of 2005 came by way of a leveraged buyout: when a significant amount of borrowed money is used to fund the acquisition of a company, with the debt secured against that company itself.”
1 - https://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/manchester-unit...
- The Pi 5 does support OTG mode, e.g. see:
https://www.foxipex.com/2024/10/26/virtual-keyboard-over-usb...
- About PowerToys’ Text Extractor, there’s equivalent functionality in Windows now, from [1]:
It's recommended to use the Snipping Tool instead of the Text Extractor for capturing screenshots.
[1] https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/powertoys/text-ext...
- FWIW, USA buys uranium from Russia, e.g. see: https://www.osw.waw.pl/en/publikacje/analyses/2025-06-18/rus...
- Adding to the list, DeviceScript, which affords running TypeScript on embedded devices:
- If you’re in the mood for an almost unbearably moving one, would recommend Nobody Knows.
- The memory in the Cray was external and there are RP2350 boards with 16MB of QSPI flash, here’s one of them:
https://www.olimex.com/Products/RaspberryPi/PICO/PICO2-XXL/o...
- Early 80s (1982), according to Wikipedia:
- Applied Science YT channel has an interesting video showing this at work:
Dramatically improve microscope resolution with an LED array and Fourier Ptychography
- See https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/office/dev/add-ins/overvie....
Note: this is in the context of 'programmatically extending Office/M365', I don't think the OP was referring to COM in general.
COM is at the base of WinRT, which is pretty much _not_ deprecated.
- Am partial to the following vintage video on transmission lines from Tektronix:
- With exceptions, was reading recently an interesting die analysis/estimate of the costs and margins of manufacturing of the AD9361 chip (a 65nm, digital radio transceiver, introduced 12 years ago and still selling at retail today for $300/$400):
https://zeptobars.com/en/read/AD9361-SDR-Analog-Devices-DAC-...
Relevant quotes (and the current retail price if anything is higher now then when the article was written):
“ Retail price of AD9361 at distributes is 275$, volume price from manufacturer is 175$.
That is quite an impressive added value! For 1,68$ of manufacturing cost we are getting 173,32$ of added value! Even Intel with their x86 or drug cartels could NOT do business like that.”
Of course, the actual margin needs to take into account NRE and other costs (and the above link does get into that) but, in this case, the manufacturing is a tiny sliver of the costs.
- From https://octopart.com/search?q=CYW43439¤cy=USD&specs=0.
Indeed the lowest price $2.551 from Arrow has a MOQ of 5000 but Newark does have it for a promotional price of $2.73 for quantities as low as 1.
It’s not $2.5 but that’s why it was quoted as ~$2.5 in my reply, since it’s in the ballpark.
- The WiFi (& Bluetooth) IC used in the Pi Pico W retails for ~$2.5, and presumably a bit less in volume (considering the Pico W is only $2 more than the base Pi Pico.
- The barcode scanning in the Libib app (an app to keep track of books) seems quite fast, it is quite addictive to just zap the barcodes and see the book data added to the catalog.
It seems comparable to the laser based scanners used at library checkouts for example.
- This would likely have been the Mintronics POV kit (MAKE had a whole series of kits that shipped in an Altoids/mints tin, e.g. the Mintronics survival pack [1], which had a mini breadboard and 60+ components), here is a picture:
https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/make-mintronics-blink...
It seems to be based on the Blinky POV:
https://www.wayneandlayne.com/projects/blinky/
A similar idea (transferring data via computer screen) goes back to 1994's Timex Datalink:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timex_Datalink
1 https://makezine.com/article/technology/in-the-maker-shed-mi...
- The ULX4M boards are not available yet but seem to support both PCIe as well as digital video:
https://kitspace.org/boards/github.com/intergalaktik/ulx4m/
Done by the same team who did the ULX3S.